AbstractThe paper discussed how spatial thinking can be promoted, albeit implicitly, to local government officials through disaster risk management planning. It drew lessons from a multi-year, multi-partner Disaster Risk Management Master Planning program developed and implemented by the Earthquakes and Megacities Initiative, an international scientific NGO, in Kathmandu Metropolitan City, Nepal. It described how three types of spatial thinking -cognition in space, cognition about space, and cognition with space-can be incorporated in the functional areas of disaster risk reduction, and how certain operational features of the DRMMP facilitated such linkage. The study has shown that through disaster risk management planning, spatial thinking...
The scientific research described in this paper concerns the theme of Civil Protection Planning at R...
Purpose: The Hyogo Framework for Action focussed disaster risk reduction (DRR) on land-use planning,...
The aim of this article is to reflect on the need to create emerging knowledge construction processe...
Geography has a long record of understanding, managing and governing disaster. The key element that ...
Abstract: Disaster has been with us as long as long recorded history, and presumably even longer...
The world is confronted with a rapidly growing impact of disasters, due to many factors that cause a...
Geographical information systems can offer insights into the possibilities for emergency response an...
Each year, disasters such as storms, floods, fires, volcanoes, earthquakes, and epidemics cause thou...
With increasing exposure to environmental catastrophes and natural hazards, the terminology of ‘resi...
There is an urgent need for cities to consider disaster and climate change issues. Disasters have ca...
Disaster risk reduction (DRR) is an important component for achieving sustainable development of cit...
More than ever before, the last decade revealed the immense vulnerability of the world’s cities to n...
Disaster management is widely recognised as a complex task. Despite well-established techniques, eac...
© 2010 Heri Sutanta, Abbas Rajabifard & Ian D. Bishop. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3...
Mapping Risk situates geospatial technologies in a long line of media composing an evolving (nuclear...
The scientific research described in this paper concerns the theme of Civil Protection Planning at R...
Purpose: The Hyogo Framework for Action focussed disaster risk reduction (DRR) on land-use planning,...
The aim of this article is to reflect on the need to create emerging knowledge construction processe...
Geography has a long record of understanding, managing and governing disaster. The key element that ...
Abstract: Disaster has been with us as long as long recorded history, and presumably even longer...
The world is confronted with a rapidly growing impact of disasters, due to many factors that cause a...
Geographical information systems can offer insights into the possibilities for emergency response an...
Each year, disasters such as storms, floods, fires, volcanoes, earthquakes, and epidemics cause thou...
With increasing exposure to environmental catastrophes and natural hazards, the terminology of ‘resi...
There is an urgent need for cities to consider disaster and climate change issues. Disasters have ca...
Disaster risk reduction (DRR) is an important component for achieving sustainable development of cit...
More than ever before, the last decade revealed the immense vulnerability of the world’s cities to n...
Disaster management is widely recognised as a complex task. Despite well-established techniques, eac...
© 2010 Heri Sutanta, Abbas Rajabifard & Ian D. Bishop. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3...
Mapping Risk situates geospatial technologies in a long line of media composing an evolving (nuclear...
The scientific research described in this paper concerns the theme of Civil Protection Planning at R...
Purpose: The Hyogo Framework for Action focussed disaster risk reduction (DRR) on land-use planning,...
The aim of this article is to reflect on the need to create emerging knowledge construction processe...